CTAIDI

The Customer Total Average Interruption Duration Index (CTAIDI)[1] is a reliability indicator associated with electric power distribution.[2] CTAIDI is the average total duration of interruption for customers who had at least one interruption during the period of analysis, and is calculated as:


\mbox{CTAIDI} = \frac{\sum{U_i N_i}}{N_{io}}

where N_i is the number of customers and U_i is the annual outage time for location i, and N_{io} is the number of customers at location i that were interrupted. In other words,


\mbox{CTAIDI} = \frac{\mbox{sum of durations of customer interruptions}}{\mbox{number of distinct customers interrupted}}

CTAIDI is measured in units of time, such as minutes or hours. It is similar to CAIDI, but CAIDI divides the total duration of interruptions by the number of interruptions whereas CTAIDI divides by the number of interrupted customers. When CTAIDI is much greater than CAIDI, the service outages are more concentrated among certain customers.

CTAIDI also has the same numerator as SAIDI, but SAIDI divides the total duration of interruptions by the total number of customers served. The fraction of distinct customers interrupted illustrates the relationship between several reliability indicators:


 \frac{N_{io}}{N_i} = \frac{\mbox{SAIDI}}{\mbox{CTAIDI}} = \frac{\mbox{SAIFI}}{\mbox{CAIFI}}

See also

References

  1. Willis, H. Lee. "Power Distribution Planning Reference Book, Second Edition". Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  2. Ahmad, Ashraf. "Electrical Distribution Reliability" (PDF). International Journal of Innovative Research in Science, Engineering and Technology. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
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